I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
Donate!: http://bit.ly/DonateCTVM2.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More content: http://CalebCurry.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CalebTheVideoMaker
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CalebTheVideoMaker2
Twitter: http://twitter.com/calebCurry
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published:02 Jan 2017

views:1139

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

published:13 Jun 2011

views:1284124

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

published:25 Oct 2009

views:334551030

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

published:01 Jul 2012

views:2033

In honor of Earth Day, we decided to finally put an end to the ridiculous argument of whether the Earth is round or flat.
Watch Bloopers and BTS here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsPgmBD-DtA&feature=youtu.be
Book Tour info and Pre-order links "how to write good"
http://higatv.com/ryan-higas-how-to-write-good-pre-order-links/
Just Launched New Official Store
https://www.gianthugs.com/collections/ryan
HigaTV Channel
http://www.youtube.com/higatv
Twitter
http://www.twitter.com/therealryanhiga
Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/higatv
Website
http://www.higatv.com
Instagram
http://www.instagram.com/notryanhiga
Send us mail or whatever you want here!
PO Box 232355
Las Vegas, NV 89105

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

This is a Technique by Which you can make Notepad type Automatically whatever you want.
This Process is known as ”GhostKeyboard Typing” Because you don't even touch your keyboard and words starts displaying in your notepad.

published:27 May 2017

views:68

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Christmas Eve a tagged shark was eaten by a massive unknown sea creature
-What Happened?
-Why it's Mysterious?
-And what are the Plausible Explainations?
-What Happened?
DocumentaryFilmmakerDaveRiggs and his crew, who tagged a large number of great white sharks off the coasts of Bremer Bay in Australia, encountered something very unusual.
One of the tags of a large shark was discovered washed up on shore.
The tag had no signs of algae, but instead appeared to have been heavily bleach by stomach acid.
Using satellite tracking, they were able to pin point the exact time the shark was mysterious attacked and eaten.
-Why this is mysterious
This is mysterious for 2 reasons
1.) The data showed the tag taking a sudden 1902 foot drop down the continental shelf which indicated that the shark had just become prey to something big and very fast.
2.) After further examination, it was revealed that the tag had been ingested by an animal with an internal temperate of around 78 degrees Fahrenheit, 32 degrees higher than
than the great white's normal temperature.
-Plausible Explainations?
Some people suggested that it could have been an orca, they are certainly large enough, with the biggest on record being 32 feet long and they have been known to hunt
great white sharks, however, the problem with this theory is that killer whales generally stay near the surface and the deepest an orca has ever been recorded was 850 feet
while this unknown creature was nearly 2,000 feet deep.
Another theory was that the tag may have somehow been removed from the shark. However, the trouble with this explanation is that
great white sharks body temperature is significantly warmer than the surrounding water, so if the tag had been removed the tracker would have to have picked up a sudden drop in temperature, which
which, it did not.
So could another larger great white shark have been the culprit? Not likely because of the temperate shift.
The temperate of the tag while in the muscle tissue is about 8 degrees warmer than the cold ocean water.
-Recorded Tag Temperature 46F
-Water Temperature 38F
The temperature of a great white shark's belly will range between 13-25 degrees warmer than the surrounding waters.
So this would indicate a temperature between 52 degrees with a maximum of 64 degrees.
The temperature of whatever unknown sea animal that ate the tagged shark was at 78 degrees.
Let'sConnect
-- http://www.epicadamwildlife.com/
-- http://www.facebook.com/epicadamwildlife
-- http://www.twitter.com/epicwildlife
-- http://gplus.to/epicwildlife

Raw data, i.e. unprocessed data, is a collection of numbers, characters; data processing commonly occurs by stages, and the "processed data" from one stage may be considered the "raw data" of the next. Field data is raw data that is collected in an uncontrolled in situ environment. Experimental data is data that is generated within the context of a scientific investigation by observation and recording.

The Latin word "data" is the plural of "datum", and still may be used as a plural noun in this sense. Nowadays, though, "data" is most commonly used in the singular, as a mass noun (like "information", "sand" or "rain").

Early life

Ryan Lewis was born on March 25, 1988 to Julie and Scott Lewis. Lewis has two sisters, Teresa and Laura, four years and two years older than him, respectively. At an early age, he played guitar in rock bands, and nursed a growing interest in music production around the age of 15. He attended Ferris High School in Spokane, Washington and graduated from Roosevelt High School in Seattle. He graduated from the University of Washington majoring in Comparative History of Ideas.

HTML

HyperText Markup Language, commonly referred to as HTML, is the standard markup language used to create web pages. Along with CSS, and JavaScript, HTML is a cornerstone technology, used by most websites to create visually engaging web pages, user interfaces for web applications, and user interfaces for many mobile applications.Web browsers can read HTML files and render them into visible or audible web pages. HTML describes the structure of a websitesemantically along with cues for presentation, making it a markup language, rather than a programming language.

HTML elements form the building blocks of all websites. HTML allows images and objects to be embedded and can be used to create interactive forms. It provides a means to create structured documents by denoting structural semantics for text such as headings, paragraphs, lists, links, quotes and other items.

The language is written in the form of HTML elements consisting of tags enclosed in angle brackets (like <html>). Browsers do not display the HTML tags and scripts, but use them to interpret the content of the page.

Soundgarden - Fell On Black Days

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
Donate!: http://bit.ly/DonateCTVM2.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More content: http://CalebCurry.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CalebTheVideoMaker
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CalebTheVideoMaker2
Twitter: http://twitter.com/calebCurry
AmazingWeb Hosting - https://www.dreamhost.com/r.cgi?1487063 (The best web hosting for a cheap price!)

6:13

Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

3:33

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

2:32

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

10:24

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

In honor of Earth Day, we decided to finally put an end to the ridiculous argument of whether the Earth is round or flat.
Watch Bloopers and BTS here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsPgmBD-DtA&feature=youtu.be
Book Tour info and Pre-order links "how to write good"
http://higatv.com/ryan-higas-how-to-write-good-pre-order-links/
Just Launched New Official Store
https://www.gianthugs.com/collections/ryan
HigaTV Channel
http://www.youtube.com/higatv
Twitter
http://www.twitter.com/therealryanhiga
Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/higatv
Website
http://www.higatv.com
Instagram
http://www.instagram.com/notryanhiga
Send us mail or whatever you want here!
PO Box 232355
Las Vegas, NV 89105

I WON!!!

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

Ghost Keyboard Typing - Make your Notepad Type Automatically

This is a Technique by Which you can make Notepad type Automatically whatever you want.
This Process is known as ”GhostKeyboard Typing” Because you don't even touch your keyboard and words starts displaying in your notepad.

2:57

9 Ft Shark Eaten by Unknown Sea Creature

9 Ft Shark Eaten by Unknown Sea Creature

9 Ft Shark Eaten by Unknown Sea Creature

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Christmas Eve a tagged shark was eaten by a massive unknown sea creature
-What Happened?
-Why it's Mysterious?
-And what are the Plausible Explainations?
-What Happened?
DocumentaryFilmmakerDaveRiggs and his crew, who tagged a large number of great white sharks off the coasts of Bremer Bay in Australia, encountered something very unusual.
One of the tags of a large shark was discovered washed up on shore.
The tag had no signs of algae, but instead appeared to have been heavily bleach by stomach acid.
Using satellite tracking, they were able to pin point the exact time the shark was mysterious attacked and eaten.
-Why this is mysterious
This is mysterious for 2 reasons
1.) The data showed the tag taking a sudden 1902 foot drop down the continental shelf which indicated that the shark had just become prey to something big and very fast.
2.) After further examination, it was revealed that the tag had been ingested by an animal with an internal temperate of around 78 degrees Fahrenheit, 32 degrees higher than
than the great white's normal temperature.
-Plausible Explainations?
Some people suggested that it could have been an orca, they are certainly large enough, with the biggest on record being 32 feet long and they have been known to hunt
great white sharks, however, the problem with this theory is that killer whales generally stay near the surface and the deepest an orca has ever been recorded was 850 feet
while this unknown creature was nearly 2,000 feet deep.
Another theory was that the tag may have somehow been removed from the shark. However, the trouble with this explanation is that
great white sharks body temperature is significantly warmer than the surrounding water, so if the tag had been removed the tracker would have to have picked up a sudden drop in temperature, which
which, it did not.
So could another larger great white shark have been the culprit? Not likely because of the temperate shift.
The temperate of the tag while in the muscle tissue is about 8 degrees warmer than the cold ocean water.
-Recorded Tag Temperature 46F
-Water Temperature 38F
The temperature of a great white shark's belly will range between 13-25 degrees warmer than the surrounding waters.
So this would indicate a temperature between 52 degrees with a maximum of 64 degrees.
The temperature of whatever unknown sea animal that ate the tagged shark was at 78 degrees.
Let'sConnect
-- http://www.epicadamwildlife.com/
-- http://www.facebook.com/epicadamwildlife
-- http://www.twitter.com/epicwildlife
-- http://gplus.to/epicwildlife

6:31

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types. As we know, there are many data types in C programming. C is an example of a strongly typed programming language. Strongly typed means that every piece of data has a specific type.
Imagine if we stored everything in strings. This would become a problem because the computer would never know how to work with certain data. For example, let's say we have "5" and "6" and we try to add them. Should the computer add the numbers to be "11", or should it combine the strings to be "56" (The process of combining two strings like this is known as concatenation). Concatenation doesn't work quite this way in C, but in general, these are the kinds of problems that come up when we do not have things strongly typed. The opposite of a strongly typed language is called a loosely typed language. Now, a loosely typed language is not quite this loose.
A loosely typed language will usually have a few general types such as numbers, characters, or strings, but they are not nearly as strict with the typing.
What is a good example of this?
In C, if we do something like this: 1/3, the result is going to be zero. That's because the type of data being used are all integers. A loosely typed language is probably not going to be that obnoxious about types.
The benefit of using a strongly typed language is that it teaches you to be very discrete about what you want the computer to do. I think of a loosely typed language like water: it’s flowy and forgiving. I imagine a strongly typed language as very strict. Using a loosely typed language can be more simple starting out because you don't have to worry about all of the different data types, but there is less protection as we will see soon.
For example, in a popular programming language known as JavaScript the type system is loosely typed. This means instead of having data types like integer, double, float, signed and unsigned, we just have numbers. Some people call the way JavaScript works with data types as duck typing…. Which is weird, but basically it says something like "if it looks like a duck, if it talks like a duck, it is a duck."
Let's say you write a function (which is just a section of code you can call multiple times) which expects a number. Whoever uses that function can pass in whatever they want, or pass in nothing at all.
Because JavaScript is not strongly typed, you have to do extra work inside of the function to make sure the function responds appropriately. What happens if somebody throws in an array? What happens if somebody throws in a string? What happens if somebody throws in a potato?
With a strongly typed language, you often have to pay extra attention to data types, but you have an extra layer of protection, too. Different people like different things.
In C, it is not easy to flow between data types. Because of this, we need something called type casting. That is what we will be discussing in the next video.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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7:28

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time

Top 10 Most DangerousHackers Of All Time
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/wXYv9V
Jonathan James
A lot of hackers start young and they will only get younger as this generation grows up surrounded by technology. Jonathan James was the poster boy for teenage hackers, gaining his first conviction at the age of 16 for stealing $170m worth of code from NASA. He did this by hacking into the computers of the DefenceThreatReductionAgency and installing a “backdoor” which gave him access to both messages and source code. He was 15 at the time of the offence and 16 when tried, so received only a juvenile sentence. He resolved to put this past behind him but in 2007 his name was mentioned in conjunction with a hack on the TJX department store. Maintaining his innocence but convinced he would go to prison, he committed suicide on May 18th 2008.
Kevin PoulsenSometimes hackers can appear perfectly innocent in their day-to-day lives. Take Kevin Poulsen, who is now News Editor for wired.com – a popular and legitimate site favored by geeks. But he was once a black-hat hacker, pulling off such stunts as winning a Porsche 9-44 S2 from KIIS-FM by hacking their phone lines and guaranteeing he was the 102nd caller. Like other hackers, he has used his powers for the greater good by identifying MySpace users who were looking for child porn and convicting over 100 individuals. But he also hacked into the FBI computers and ending up serving a 5-year sentence for his crimes. Since his release, he’s concentrated on his writing career not just at wired but also with his book “Kingpin”.
Gary McKinnon
Gary McKinnon has been labeled by the media for carrying out the biggest computer hack of all time and being one of the most dangerous computer hackers in the world. He has been credited with carrying out the biggest and most dangerous attack on the U.S. military computer servers and deleting vital information, softwares, data and files over a period of 1 year whilst sitting in London. His actions have costed the U.S. government more than $70,000 for undoing whatever McKinnon had done. His act had left thousands of computers inoperable for a period of 24 hours. McKinnon argues that he carried out this activity to uncover information that the U.S. government may be hiding from the general public like technology and the likelihood of extra-terrestrial life.
Investigation against McKinnon started in the year of 2002 with the U.S. government demanding an extradition. McKinnon and his lawyers have long countered the extradition to the U.S citing the possibility of inhumane conditions in America, health grounds and stating the lack of necessity to face trial in the U.S.Albert Gonzales
The only motive for Albert Gonzales was to make money, a lot of it and really fast. Gonzales started a group of hackers called the Shadowcrew group. There were more than 4,000 members on the website who aided in trafficking 1.5 million credit, debit and ATM card numbers. The website taught it’s users on how to sell these cards, create fake documents and a host of other things they needed to know. Gonzales avoided a jail term by spilling the beans on the Shadowcrew group and providing information of all his associates.
From mid-2005 to the ending of 2007 Gonzales managed to hack into the computer systems of the TJX group of retailers servers and steal over 45 million card details. He and his crew were able to pull it off by using unsecured wi-fi connections along U.S. Route 1. Gonzales was finally arrested in 2008 and is currently serving a prison term, which is due to end in 2025.
Anonymous
Anonymous is the name of the decentralized "hacktivist" group known for launching online hacking campaigns in support of current political and social events. The group began in 2003 in the online forum 4chan with their mascot being the Guy Fawkes mask. At first it was a way for online members to collectively pull pranks, but it morphed into an online "vigilante" service looking for justice. The group has targeted the Church of Scientology, the KKK, PayPal, and many other high-profile institutions. It is known for its tagline, "We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us."
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Soundgarden - Fell On Black Days

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a sim...

published: 02 Jan 2017

Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very ...

published: 13 Jun 2011

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never g...

published: 25 Oct 2009

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

published: 01 Jul 2012

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

In honor of Earth Day, we decided to finally put an end to the ridiculous argument of whether the Earth is round or flat.
Watch Bloopers and BTS here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsPgmBD-DtA&feature=youtu.be
Book Tour info and Pre-order links "how to write good"
http://higatv.com/ryan-higas-how-to-write-good-pre-order-links/
Just Launched New Official Store
https://www.gianthugs.com/collections/ryan
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http://www.youtube.com/higatv
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http://www.higatv.com
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Send us mail or whatever you want here!
PO Box 232355
Las Vegas, NV 89105

I WON!!!

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watc...

Apple — WWDC 2017 Keynote

Ghost Keyboard Typing - Make your Notepad Type Automatically

This is a Technique by Which you can make Notepad type Automatically whatever you want.
This Process is known as ”GhostKeyboard Typing” Because you don't even touch your keyboard and words starts displaying in your notepad.

published: 27 May 2017

9 Ft Shark Eaten by Unknown Sea Creature

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Christmas Eve a tagged shark was eaten by a massive unknown sea creature
-What Happened?
-Why it's Mysterious?
-And what are the Plausible Explainations?
-What Happened?
DocumentaryFilmmakerDaveRiggs and his crew, who tagged a large number of great white sharks off the coasts of Bremer Bay in Australia, encountered something very unusual.
One of the tags of a large shark was discovered washed up on shore.
The tag had no signs of algae, but instead appeared to have been heavily bleach by stomach acid.
Using satellite tracking, they were able to pin point the exact time the shark was mysterious attacked and eaten.
-Why this is...

published: 10 Jun 2014

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types. As we know, there are many data types in C programming. C is an example of a strongly typed programming language. Strongly typed means that every piece of data has a specific type.
Imagine if we stored everything in strings. This would become a problem because the computer would never know how to work with certain data. For example, let's say we have "5" and "6" and we try to add them. Should the computer add the numbers to be "11", or should it combine the strings to be "56" (The process of combining two strings like this is known as concatenation). Concatenation doesn't work quite this way in C, but in general, these are the kinds of problems that come up when we do not have things stro...

published: 01 May 2017

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time

Top 10 Most DangerousHackers Of All Time
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/wXYv9V
Jonathan James
A lot of hackers start young and they will only get younger as this generation grows up surrounded by technology. Jonathan James was the poster boy for teenage hackers, gaining his first conviction at the age of 16 for stealing $170m worth of code from NASA. He did this by hacking into the computers of the DefenceThreatReductionAgency and installing a “backdoor” which gave him access to both messages and source code. He was 15 at the time of the offence and 16 when tried, so received only a juvenile sentence. He resolved to put this past behind him but in 2007 his name was mentioned in conjunction with a hack on the TJX department store. Maintaining his innocence but convinced he wo...

published: 10 Aug 2017

8 Lesser-Known, Useful Elements

There are 118 elements on the periodic table, but it seems like only a handful of them get any attention. But just because you haven't heard of an element doesn't mean that it isn't a vital part of everyday life.
Hosted by: Michael Aranda
----------
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ed010p227?journalCode=jceda8
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/rare-earth-elements-not-so-rare-after-all/
http://chemistry.tutorcircle.com/inorganic-chemistry/lanthanides.html
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601293/
http://chemistry.tutorcircle.com/inorganic-chemistry/lanthanides.html
http://avalonadvancedmaterials.com/rare_metals/praseodymium/
http://www.springer.com/cda/content/document/cda_downloaddocument/9783642354571-c2.pdf?SGWID=0-0-45-1379023-p174751778
https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2013/107...

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data type...

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
Donate!: http://bit.ly/DonateCTVM2.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More content: http://CalebCurry.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CalebTheVideoMaker
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CalebTheVideoMaker2
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I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
Donate!: http://bit.ly/DonateCTVM2.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More content: http://CalebCurry.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CalebTheVideoMaker
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CalebTheVideoMaker2
Twitter: http://twitter.com/calebCurry
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Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

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Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever ...

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Ni...

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

This is a Technique by Which you can make Notepad type Automatically whatever you want.
This Process is known as ”GhostKeyboard Typing” Because you don't even touch your keyboard and words starts displaying in your notepad.

This is a Technique by Which you can make Notepad type Automatically whatever you want.
This Process is known as ”GhostKeyboard Typing” Because you don't even touch your keyboard and words starts displaying in your notepad.

9 Ft Shark Eaten by Unknown Sea Creature

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Chris...

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Christmas Eve a tagged shark was eaten by a massive unknown sea creature
-What Happened?
-Why it's Mysterious?
-And what are the Plausible Explainations?
-What Happened?
DocumentaryFilmmakerDaveRiggs and his crew, who tagged a large number of great white sharks off the coasts of Bremer Bay in Australia, encountered something very unusual.
One of the tags of a large shark was discovered washed up on shore.
The tag had no signs of algae, but instead appeared to have been heavily bleach by stomach acid.
Using satellite tracking, they were able to pin point the exact time the shark was mysterious attacked and eaten.
-Why this is mysterious
This is mysterious for 2 reasons
1.) The data showed the tag taking a sudden 1902 foot drop down the continental shelf which indicated that the shark had just become prey to something big and very fast.
2.) After further examination, it was revealed that the tag had been ingested by an animal with an internal temperate of around 78 degrees Fahrenheit, 32 degrees higher than
than the great white's normal temperature.
-Plausible Explainations?
Some people suggested that it could have been an orca, they are certainly large enough, with the biggest on record being 32 feet long and they have been known to hunt
great white sharks, however, the problem with this theory is that killer whales generally stay near the surface and the deepest an orca has ever been recorded was 850 feet
while this unknown creature was nearly 2,000 feet deep.
Another theory was that the tag may have somehow been removed from the shark. However, the trouble with this explanation is that
great white sharks body temperature is significantly warmer than the surrounding water, so if the tag had been removed the tracker would have to have picked up a sudden drop in temperature, which
which, it did not.
So could another larger great white shark have been the culprit? Not likely because of the temperate shift.
The temperate of the tag while in the muscle tissue is about 8 degrees warmer than the cold ocean water.
-Recorded Tag Temperature 46F
-Water Temperature 38F
The temperature of a great white shark's belly will range between 13-25 degrees warmer than the surrounding waters.
So this would indicate a temperature between 52 degrees with a maximum of 64 degrees.
The temperature of whatever unknown sea animal that ate the tagged shark was at 78 degrees.
Let'sConnect
-- http://www.epicadamwildlife.com/
-- http://www.facebook.com/epicadamwildlife
-- http://www.twitter.com/epicwildlife
-- http://gplus.to/epicwildlife

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Christmas Eve a tagged shark was eaten by a massive unknown sea creature
-What Happened?
-Why it's Mysterious?
-And what are the Plausible Explainations?
-What Happened?
DocumentaryFilmmakerDaveRiggs and his crew, who tagged a large number of great white sharks off the coasts of Bremer Bay in Australia, encountered something very unusual.
One of the tags of a large shark was discovered washed up on shore.
The tag had no signs of algae, but instead appeared to have been heavily bleach by stomach acid.
Using satellite tracking, they were able to pin point the exact time the shark was mysterious attacked and eaten.
-Why this is mysterious
This is mysterious for 2 reasons
1.) The data showed the tag taking a sudden 1902 foot drop down the continental shelf which indicated that the shark had just become prey to something big and very fast.
2.) After further examination, it was revealed that the tag had been ingested by an animal with an internal temperate of around 78 degrees Fahrenheit, 32 degrees higher than
than the great white's normal temperature.
-Plausible Explainations?
Some people suggested that it could have been an orca, they are certainly large enough, with the biggest on record being 32 feet long and they have been known to hunt
great white sharks, however, the problem with this theory is that killer whales generally stay near the surface and the deepest an orca has ever been recorded was 850 feet
while this unknown creature was nearly 2,000 feet deep.
Another theory was that the tag may have somehow been removed from the shark. However, the trouble with this explanation is that
great white sharks body temperature is significantly warmer than the surrounding water, so if the tag had been removed the tracker would have to have picked up a sudden drop in temperature, which
which, it did not.
So could another larger great white shark have been the culprit? Not likely because of the temperate shift.
The temperate of the tag while in the muscle tissue is about 8 degrees warmer than the cold ocean water.
-Recorded Tag Temperature 46F
-Water Temperature 38F
The temperature of a great white shark's belly will range between 13-25 degrees warmer than the surrounding waters.
So this would indicate a temperature between 52 degrees with a maximum of 64 degrees.
The temperature of whatever unknown sea animal that ate the tagged shark was at 78 degrees.
Let'sConnect
-- http://www.epicadamwildlife.com/
-- http://www.facebook.com/epicadamwildlife
-- http://www.twitter.com/epicwildlife
-- http://gplus.to/epicwildlife

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types. As we know, there are many data types in C programming. C is an ex...

This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types. As we know, there are many data types in C programming. C is an example of a strongly typed programming language. Strongly typed means that every piece of data has a specific type.
Imagine if we stored everything in strings. This would become a problem because the computer would never know how to work with certain data. For example, let's say we have "5" and "6" and we try to add them. Should the computer add the numbers to be "11", or should it combine the strings to be "56" (The process of combining two strings like this is known as concatenation). Concatenation doesn't work quite this way in C, but in general, these are the kinds of problems that come up when we do not have things strongly typed. The opposite of a strongly typed language is called a loosely typed language. Now, a loosely typed language is not quite this loose.
A loosely typed language will usually have a few general types such as numbers, characters, or strings, but they are not nearly as strict with the typing.
What is a good example of this?
In C, if we do something like this: 1/3, the result is going to be zero. That's because the type of data being used are all integers. A loosely typed language is probably not going to be that obnoxious about types.
The benefit of using a strongly typed language is that it teaches you to be very discrete about what you want the computer to do. I think of a loosely typed language like water: it’s flowy and forgiving. I imagine a strongly typed language as very strict. Using a loosely typed language can be more simple starting out because you don't have to worry about all of the different data types, but there is less protection as we will see soon.
For example, in a popular programming language known as JavaScript the type system is loosely typed. This means instead of having data types like integer, double, float, signed and unsigned, we just have numbers. Some people call the way JavaScript works with data types as duck typing…. Which is weird, but basically it says something like "if it looks like a duck, if it talks like a duck, it is a duck."
Let's say you write a function (which is just a section of code you can call multiple times) which expects a number. Whoever uses that function can pass in whatever they want, or pass in nothing at all.
Because JavaScript is not strongly typed, you have to do extra work inside of the function to make sure the function responds appropriately. What happens if somebody throws in an array? What happens if somebody throws in a string? What happens if somebody throws in a potato?
With a strongly typed language, you often have to pay extra attention to data types, but you have an extra layer of protection, too. Different people like different things.
In C, it is not easy to flow between data types. Because of this, we need something called type casting. That is what we will be discussing in the next video.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types. As we know, there are many data types in C programming. C is an example of a strongly typed programming language. Strongly typed means that every piece of data has a specific type.
Imagine if we stored everything in strings. This would become a problem because the computer would never know how to work with certain data. For example, let's say we have "5" and "6" and we try to add them. Should the computer add the numbers to be "11", or should it combine the strings to be "56" (The process of combining two strings like this is known as concatenation). Concatenation doesn't work quite this way in C, but in general, these are the kinds of problems that come up when we do not have things strongly typed. The opposite of a strongly typed language is called a loosely typed language. Now, a loosely typed language is not quite this loose.
A loosely typed language will usually have a few general types such as numbers, characters, or strings, but they are not nearly as strict with the typing.
What is a good example of this?
In C, if we do something like this: 1/3, the result is going to be zero. That's because the type of data being used are all integers. A loosely typed language is probably not going to be that obnoxious about types.
The benefit of using a strongly typed language is that it teaches you to be very discrete about what you want the computer to do. I think of a loosely typed language like water: it’s flowy and forgiving. I imagine a strongly typed language as very strict. Using a loosely typed language can be more simple starting out because you don't have to worry about all of the different data types, but there is less protection as we will see soon.
For example, in a popular programming language known as JavaScript the type system is loosely typed. This means instead of having data types like integer, double, float, signed and unsigned, we just have numbers. Some people call the way JavaScript works with data types as duck typing…. Which is weird, but basically it says something like "if it looks like a duck, if it talks like a duck, it is a duck."
Let's say you write a function (which is just a section of code you can call multiple times) which expects a number. Whoever uses that function can pass in whatever they want, or pass in nothing at all.
Because JavaScript is not strongly typed, you have to do extra work inside of the function to make sure the function responds appropriately. What happens if somebody throws in an array? What happens if somebody throws in a string? What happens if somebody throws in a potato?
With a strongly typed language, you often have to pay extra attention to data types, but you have an extra layer of protection, too. Different people like different things.
In C, it is not easy to flow between data types. Because of this, we need something called type casting. That is what we will be discussing in the next video.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
Donate!: http://bit.ly/DonateCTVM2.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More content: http://CalebCurry.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CalebTheVideoMaker
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CalebTheVideoMaker2
Twitter: http://twitter.com/calebCurry
AmazingWeb Hosting - https://www.dreamhost.com/r.cgi?1487063 (The best web hosting for a cheap price!)

Top 10 Most DangerousHackers Of All Time
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/wXYv9V
Jonathan James
A lot of hackers start young and they will only get younger as this generation grows up surrounded by technology. Jonathan James was the poster boy for teenage hackers, gaining his first conviction at the age of 16 for stealing $170m worth of code from NASA. He did this by hacking into the computers of the DefenceThreatReductionAgency and installing a “backdoor” which gave him access to both messages and source code. He was 15 at the time of the offence and 16 when tried, so received only a juvenile sentence. He resolved to put this past behind him but in 2007 his name was mentioned in conjunction with a hack on the TJX department store. Maintaining his innocence but convinced he would go to prison, he committed suicide on May 18th 2008.
Kevin PoulsenSometimes hackers can appear perfectly innocent in their day-to-day lives. Take Kevin Poulsen, who is now News Editor for wired.com – a popular and legitimate site favored by geeks. But he was once a black-hat hacker, pulling off such stunts as winning a Porsche 9-44 S2 from KIIS-FM by hacking their phone lines and guaranteeing he was the 102nd caller. Like other hackers, he has used his powers for the greater good by identifying MySpace users who were looking for child porn and convicting over 100 individuals. But he also hacked into the FBI computers and ending up serving a 5-year sentence for his crimes. Since his release, he’s concentrated on his writing career not just at wired but also with his book “Kingpin”.
Gary McKinnon
Gary McKinnon has been labeled by the media for carrying out the biggest computer hack of all time and being one of the most dangerous computer hackers in the world. He has been credited with carrying out the biggest and most dangerous attack on the U.S. military computer servers and deleting vital information, softwares, data and files over a period of 1 year whilst sitting in London. His actions have costed the U.S. government more than $70,000 for undoing whatever McKinnon had done. His act had left thousands of computers inoperable for a period of 24 hours. McKinnon argues that he carried out this activity to uncover information that the U.S. government may be hiding from the general public like technology and the likelihood of extra-terrestrial life.
Investigation against McKinnon started in the year of 2002 with the U.S. government demanding an extradition. McKinnon and his lawyers have long countered the extradition to the U.S citing the possibility of inhumane conditions in America, health grounds and stating the lack of necessity to face trial in the U.S.Albert Gonzales
The only motive for Albert Gonzales was to make money, a lot of it and really fast. Gonzales started a group of hackers called the Shadowcrew group. There were more than 4,000 members on the website who aided in trafficking 1.5 million credit, debit and ATM card numbers. The website taught it’s users on how to sell these cards, create fake documents and a host of other things they needed to know. Gonzales avoided a jail term by spilling the beans on the Shadowcrew group and providing information of all his associates.
From mid-2005 to the ending of 2007 Gonzales managed to hack into the computer systems of the TJX group of retailers servers and steal over 45 million card details. He and his crew were able to pull it off by using unsecured wi-fi connections along U.S. Route 1. Gonzales was finally arrested in 2008 and is currently serving a prison term, which is due to end in 2025.
Anonymous
Anonymous is the name of the decentralized "hacktivist" group known for launching online hacking campaigns in support of current political and social events. The group began in 2003 in the online forum 4chan with their mascot being the Guy Fawkes mask. At first it was a way for online members to collectively pull pranks, but it morphed into an online "vigilante" service looking for justice. The group has targeted the Church of Scientology, the KKK, PayPal, and many other high-profile institutions. It is known for its tagline, "We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us."
More Videos By Us:
10 People With ExtremePlastic SurgeryAddiction
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewJBxhULQ6Y&t
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Top 10 Most DangerousHackers Of All Time
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/wXYv9V
Jonathan James
A lot of hackers start young and they will only get younger as this generation grows up surrounded by technology. Jonathan James was the poster boy for teenage hackers, gaining his first conviction at the age of 16 for stealing $170m worth of code from NASA. He did this by hacking into the computers of the DefenceThreatReductionAgency and installing a “backdoor” which gave him access to both messages and source code. He was 15 at the time of the offence and 16 when tried, so received only a juvenile sentence. He resolved to put this past behind him but in 2007 his name was mentioned in conjunction with a hack on the TJX department store. Maintaining his innocence but convinced he would go to prison, he committed suicide on May 18th 2008.
Kevin PoulsenSometimes hackers can appear perfectly innocent in their day-to-day lives. Take Kevin Poulsen, who is now News Editor for wired.com – a popular and legitimate site favored by geeks. But he was once a black-hat hacker, pulling off such stunts as winning a Porsche 9-44 S2 from KIIS-FM by hacking their phone lines and guaranteeing he was the 102nd caller. Like other hackers, he has used his powers for the greater good by identifying MySpace users who were looking for child porn and convicting over 100 individuals. But he also hacked into the FBI computers and ending up serving a 5-year sentence for his crimes. Since his release, he’s concentrated on his writing career not just at wired but also with his book “Kingpin”.
Gary McKinnon
Gary McKinnon has been labeled by the media for carrying out the biggest computer hack of all time and being one of the most dangerous computer hackers in the world. He has been credited with carrying out the biggest and most dangerous attack on the U.S. military computer servers and deleting vital information, softwares, data and files over a period of 1 year whilst sitting in London. His actions have costed the U.S. government more than $70,000 for undoing whatever McKinnon had done. His act had left thousands of computers inoperable for a period of 24 hours. McKinnon argues that he carried out this activity to uncover information that the U.S. government may be hiding from the general public like technology and the likelihood of extra-terrestrial life.
Investigation against McKinnon started in the year of 2002 with the U.S. government demanding an extradition. McKinnon and his lawyers have long countered the extradition to the U.S citing the possibility of inhumane conditions in America, health grounds and stating the lack of necessity to face trial in the U.S.Albert Gonzales
The only motive for Albert Gonzales was to make money, a lot of it and really fast. Gonzales started a group of hackers called the Shadowcrew group. There were more than 4,000 members on the website who aided in trafficking 1.5 million credit, debit and ATM card numbers. The website taught it’s users on how to sell these cards, create fake documents and a host of other things they needed to know. Gonzales avoided a jail term by spilling the beans on the Shadowcrew group and providing information of all his associates.
From mid-2005 to the ending of 2007 Gonzales managed to hack into the computer systems of the TJX group of retailers servers and steal over 45 million card details. He and his crew were able to pull it off by using unsecured wi-fi connections along U.S. Route 1. Gonzales was finally arrested in 2008 and is currently serving a prison term, which is due to end in 2025.
Anonymous
Anonymous is the name of the decentralized "hacktivist" group known for launching online hacking campaigns in support of current political and social events. The group began in 2003 in the online forum 4chan with their mascot being the Guy Fawkes mask. At first it was a way for online members to collectively pull pranks, but it morphed into an online "vigilante" service looking for justice. The group has targeted the Church of Scientology, the KKK, PayPal, and many other high-profile institutions. It is known for its tagline, "We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us."
More Videos By Us:
10 People With ExtremePlastic SurgeryAddiction
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mgZOFyLnqYY
10 UnusualThings That Only Exist In China
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewJBxhULQ6Y&t
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Soundgarden - Fell On Black Days

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a sim...

published: 02 Jan 2017

Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very ...

published: 13 Jun 2011

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
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Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never g...

published: 25 Oct 2009

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

published: 01 Jul 2012

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

In honor of Earth Day, we decided to finally put an end to the ridiculous argument of whether the Earth is round or flat.
Watch Bloopers and BTS here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsPgmBD-DtA&feature=youtu.be
Book Tour info and Pre-order links "how to write good"
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Send us mail or whatever you want here!
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I WON!!!

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
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Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watc...

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data type...

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
Donate!: http://bit.ly/DonateCTVM2.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More content: http://CalebCurry.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CalebTheVideoMaker
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+CalebTheVideoMaker2
Twitter: http://twitter.com/calebCurry
AmazingWeb Hosting - https://www.dreamhost.com/r.cgi?1487063 (The best web hosting for a cheap price!)

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rickastley
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RickAstley/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialrickastley/
Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever ...

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Ni...

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
"Subscribe To ""The Late Late Show"" Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/CordenYouTube
Watch Full Episodes of ""The Late Late Show"" HERE: http://bit.ly/1ENyPw4
Like ""The Late Late Show"" on Facebook HERE: http://on.fb.me/19PIHLC
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Iv0q6k
Follow ""The Late Late Show"" on Google+ HERE: http://bit.ly/1N8a4OU
Watch The Late Late Show with James Corden weeknights at 12:35 AM ET/11:35 PM CT. Only on CBS.
Get the CBS app for iPhone & iPad! Click HERE: http://bit.ly/12rLxge
Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream live TV, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free! http://bit.ly/1OQA29B
---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

What are the implications of digital transformation, technology, machine learning, and new business models on the future of work? The impact of big data and business analytics with technologies such as artificial intelligence have profound implications for companies, individuals, and society. At the same time, government policy on these issue lags technology and the impact on people. On this episode, a respected futurist and well-known data scientist explore these complicated and important issues.
FrankDiana leads the business solutions organization for TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) Global Consulting. and is a top futurist. Anthony Scriffignano is ChiefDataScientist at Dun and Bradstreet. MichaelKrigsman is an industry analyst and host of CXOTALK.
For more information, https://www...

David Leonhardt: "How to Tell Stories with Data" | Google News Lab

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and editor of the New York Times’ data journalism website The Upshot, David Leonhardt, shares the tricks of the master storyteller’s trade. In conversation with Google News Lab data editor Simon Rogers, he shows how data is changing the world; and your part in the revolution.

The parents decide to take on the gummy vs real food challenge. See what totally disgusting foods they end up with and if they can actually eat them! Subscribe https://www.youtube.com/c/wearethedavises?sub_confirmation=1
Our mailing address:
We Are The Davises
28241 CrownValley Pkwy, Ste F #613
Laguna Niguel, CA 92677
“We Are The Davises” is an entertaining family vlog channel based in Florida. Our daily videos show our real life moments, challenges, funny skits, and traveling adventures. Shawn is an outstanding father and husband that enjoys coaching children in team sports like football and wrestling. Connie is very creative with our channel as she makes everything in our lives as fun and entertaining as possible while still molding our kids into the amazing people they are today. Kay...

Isolation - Mind Field (Ep 1)

MINDFIELD: ISOLATION
What happens when your brain is deprived of stimulation? What effect does being cut off from interaction with the outside world have on ...

MINDFIELD: ISOLATION
What happens when your brain is deprived of stimulation? What effect does being cut off from interaction with the outside world have on a person? What effect does it have on me, when I am locked in a windowless, soundproof isolation chamber for three days? In this episode of Mind Field, I take both an objective and a very intimate look at Isolation.
Special thanks to our guests:
Dominic Monaghan @DomsWildThings
Dr. Keller Wortham @DrKellerW
Dr. Ron Mossler, Chair and Professor of Psychology, La Valley CollegeWilliam Brown, and of course, Marnie and Mom.
Music by Russell Spurlock and HMX Music
http://www.russellspurlock.com
http://www.hmxmusic.com
Mind Field theme song by Jake Chudnow
https://www.youtube.com/user/jakechudnow
Reaction TimeTest - HumanBenchmark
http://www.humanbenchmark.com/tests/reactiontime
If you like this show and want to support creators and other shows like this, tell your friends about YouTubeRED! I appreciate YouTube’s dedication to scientific content. Mind Field wouldn’t have been possible without their support and belief in educational videos. It’s wonderful to know that a show like this can be made. To those of you watching: thank you. ALL OF YOU! Your passion for learning makes me feel great about the world.
Follow me at
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tweetsauce
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/electricpants
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/vsaucegaming
A YouTube RedOriginal Series - http://youtube.com/Red
If you’re in the U.S., Australia, Mexico or New Zealand, sign up for YouTube Red at youtube.com/red. If you’re not based in these countries, click here (https://goo.gl/UEojxv) for more details on how to watch.

MINDFIELD: ISOLATION
What happens when your brain is deprived of stimulation? What effect does being cut off from interaction with the outside world have on a person? What effect does it have on me, when I am locked in a windowless, soundproof isolation chamber for three days? In this episode of Mind Field, I take both an objective and a very intimate look at Isolation.
Special thanks to our guests:
Dominic Monaghan @DomsWildThings
Dr. Keller Wortham @DrKellerW
Dr. Ron Mossler, Chair and Professor of Psychology, La Valley CollegeWilliam Brown, and of course, Marnie and Mom.
Music by Russell Spurlock and HMX Music
http://www.russellspurlock.com
http://www.hmxmusic.com
Mind Field theme song by Jake Chudnow
https://www.youtube.com/user/jakechudnow
Reaction TimeTest - HumanBenchmark
http://www.humanbenchmark.com/tests/reactiontime
If you like this show and want to support creators and other shows like this, tell your friends about YouTubeRED! I appreciate YouTube’s dedication to scientific content. Mind Field wouldn’t have been possible without their support and belief in educational videos. It’s wonderful to know that a show like this can be made. To those of you watching: thank you. ALL OF YOU! Your passion for learning makes me feel great about the world.
Follow me at
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tweetsauce
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/electricpants
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/vsaucegaming
A YouTube RedOriginal Series - http://youtube.com/Red
If you’re in the U.S., Australia, Mexico or New Zealand, sign up for YouTube Red at youtube.com/red. If you’re not based in these countries, click here (https://goo.gl/UEojxv) for more details on how to watch.

What are the implications of digital transformation, technology, machine learning, and new business models on the future of work? The impact of big data and bus...

What are the implications of digital transformation, technology, machine learning, and new business models on the future of work? The impact of big data and business analytics with technologies such as artificial intelligence have profound implications for companies, individuals, and society. At the same time, government policy on these issue lags technology and the impact on people. On this episode, a respected futurist and well-known data scientist explore these complicated and important issues.
FrankDiana leads the business solutions organization for TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) Global Consulting. and is a top futurist. Anthony Scriffignano is ChiefDataScientist at Dun and Bradstreet. MichaelKrigsman is an industry analyst and host of CXOTALK.
For more information, https://www.cxotalk.com/episode/future-tech-disruption-future-work
------------------
Check out more CXOTALK episodes: https://cxotalk.com/episodes
------------------
From the transcript:
(05:35) What are the forces shaping the future of work?
Frank Diana:
(05:42) So, let me kick that off and I’d love to get Anthony’s perspective on it as well. Things like the driverless car is an easy one. That one, in the last six months to a year, has really taken off, and now people don't see it as science fiction anymore, but that driverless car, as just one scenario, has brought in deep implications across every sector. And when you actually start to look at that, you appreciate just how disruptive and impactful that one scenario is. But how about things like healthy life extension? That's one of the scenarios that I'm tracking as well, as we've looked to extend our lives, and that's not just in terms of years lived, but healthy years lived. And, what does that mean to retirement? And what does that mean to insurance, and all of the things that, really, we think about? And on, and on, and on; the maker economy. The sharing access economy. These are all scenarios that I call … And again, they do intersect and intertwine. Very impactful!
Anthony Scriffignano:
(06:30) So, maybe I can just add a little bit to that. On the driverless car, I would expand that to this concept of autonomy. So, we have things. We have cars. We have drones. We have fill-in-the-blank. And these things have agents in them that are describing their behavior, so we give them goals. In the case of a car, it might be “drive safely and get where you’re going.” And then all of a sudden, these autonomous agents need the ability to modify their goals. Something changes in the environment, somebody runs out in front of the car, etc. And now, we are … Autonomous agents are given the power to change their behavior at our request. That’s going to change everything for us. That’s going to change the way we interact with our agents because they may not be doing what we ask them to do anymore. Kind of like children, right? And also, because those agents might be able to think faster than we can, doesn’t necessarily mean that they have the experience and the context that we do, with the emotion that we do.
(07:23) So, if I could tie that to the healthy living comment, think about things like senior care. Think about things like understanding how to deal with people in the end-stages of life. Do we want autonomous agents doing that? I don't think so. So, I think at some level, this disruptive change gives us the opportunity to focus on things that human beings uniquely do better than machines, at least in the thirty-year horizon that we can see. And also, we have to pay attention to what we're giving up to those machines and make sure that that's not happening by accident. And, I would add one last thing, which is that not all of this innovation is for good. So, think about the ways that the band guys can use this disruptive innovation that's happening all around us to disrupt in ways that we don't even have words for, yet. So, there's a very high cost to doing nothing. And that high cost is that some of that innovation happens without us paying attention, and then we get disrupted in ways that are really terrifying and surprising at the same time.
(23:47) And so, the question comes up: Could I write a piece of software that could write an article about an event like that that passes the Turing Test – that lets people believe that it was written by a human? And the answer is “yes,” until a hot air balloon lands in the middle of the track that was unexpected or, all of a sudden a geyser opens up. See, these unexpected things start to happen and algorithms aren’t going to be so good at that because they haven’t been taught to write about it; whereas, a reporter would jump in and say, “This is the coolest thing ever! A hot air balloon just landed in the middle of the track and I’m going to write about it first, and I’m going to get the greatest article and I’m going to get the Pulitzer Prize.”

What are the implications of digital transformation, technology, machine learning, and new business models on the future of work? The impact of big data and business analytics with technologies such as artificial intelligence have profound implications for companies, individuals, and society. At the same time, government policy on these issue lags technology and the impact on people. On this episode, a respected futurist and well-known data scientist explore these complicated and important issues.
FrankDiana leads the business solutions organization for TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) Global Consulting. and is a top futurist. Anthony Scriffignano is ChiefDataScientist at Dun and Bradstreet. MichaelKrigsman is an industry analyst and host of CXOTALK.
For more information, https://www.cxotalk.com/episode/future-tech-disruption-future-work
------------------
Check out more CXOTALK episodes: https://cxotalk.com/episodes
------------------
From the transcript:
(05:35) What are the forces shaping the future of work?
Frank Diana:
(05:42) So, let me kick that off and I’d love to get Anthony’s perspective on it as well. Things like the driverless car is an easy one. That one, in the last six months to a year, has really taken off, and now people don't see it as science fiction anymore, but that driverless car, as just one scenario, has brought in deep implications across every sector. And when you actually start to look at that, you appreciate just how disruptive and impactful that one scenario is. But how about things like healthy life extension? That's one of the scenarios that I'm tracking as well, as we've looked to extend our lives, and that's not just in terms of years lived, but healthy years lived. And, what does that mean to retirement? And what does that mean to insurance, and all of the things that, really, we think about? And on, and on, and on; the maker economy. The sharing access economy. These are all scenarios that I call … And again, they do intersect and intertwine. Very impactful!
Anthony Scriffignano:
(06:30) So, maybe I can just add a little bit to that. On the driverless car, I would expand that to this concept of autonomy. So, we have things. We have cars. We have drones. We have fill-in-the-blank. And these things have agents in them that are describing their behavior, so we give them goals. In the case of a car, it might be “drive safely and get where you’re going.” And then all of a sudden, these autonomous agents need the ability to modify their goals. Something changes in the environment, somebody runs out in front of the car, etc. And now, we are … Autonomous agents are given the power to change their behavior at our request. That’s going to change everything for us. That’s going to change the way we interact with our agents because they may not be doing what we ask them to do anymore. Kind of like children, right? And also, because those agents might be able to think faster than we can, doesn’t necessarily mean that they have the experience and the context that we do, with the emotion that we do.
(07:23) So, if I could tie that to the healthy living comment, think about things like senior care. Think about things like understanding how to deal with people in the end-stages of life. Do we want autonomous agents doing that? I don't think so. So, I think at some level, this disruptive change gives us the opportunity to focus on things that human beings uniquely do better than machines, at least in the thirty-year horizon that we can see. And also, we have to pay attention to what we're giving up to those machines and make sure that that's not happening by accident. And, I would add one last thing, which is that not all of this innovation is for good. So, think about the ways that the band guys can use this disruptive innovation that's happening all around us to disrupt in ways that we don't even have words for, yet. So, there's a very high cost to doing nothing. And that high cost is that some of that innovation happens without us paying attention, and then we get disrupted in ways that are really terrifying and surprising at the same time.
(23:47) And so, the question comes up: Could I write a piece of software that could write an article about an event like that that passes the Turing Test – that lets people believe that it was written by a human? And the answer is “yes,” until a hot air balloon lands in the middle of the track that was unexpected or, all of a sudden a geyser opens up. See, these unexpected things start to happen and algorithms aren’t going to be so good at that because they haven’t been taught to write about it; whereas, a reporter would jump in and say, “This is the coolest thing ever! A hot air balloon just landed in the middle of the track and I’m going to write about it first, and I’m going to get the greatest article and I’m going to get the Pulitzer Prize.”

http://www.ted.com With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling uses an amazing new presentation tool, Gapminder, to present data that debunks several myths about world development. Rosling is professor of international health at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, and founder of Gapminder, a nonprofit that brings vital global data to life. (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA.)
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at http://www.ted.com/translate.
Follow us on Twitter
http://www.twitter.com/tednews
Checkout our Facebook page for TED exclusives
https://www.facebook.com/TED

http://www.ted.com With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling uses an amazing new presentation tool, Gapminder, to present data that debunks several myths about world development. Rosling is professor of international health at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, and founder of Gapminder, a nonprofit that brings vital global data to life. (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA.)
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at http://www.ted.com/translate.
Follow us on Twitter
http://www.twitter.com/tednews
Checkout our Facebook page for TED exclusives
https://www.facebook.com/TED

David Leonhardt: "How to Tell Stories with Data" | Google News Lab

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and editor of the New York Times’ data journalism website The Upshot, David Leonhardt, shares the tricks of the master storyte...

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and editor of the New York Times’ data journalism website The Upshot, David Leonhardt, shares the tricks of the master storyteller’s trade. In conversation with Google News Lab data editor Simon Rogers, he shows how data is changing the world; and your part in the revolution.

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and editor of the New York Times’ data journalism website The Upshot, David Leonhardt, shares the tricks of the master storyteller’s trade. In conversation with Google News Lab data editor Simon Rogers, he shows how data is changing the world; and your part in the revolution.

The parents decide to take on the gummy vs real food challenge. See what totally disgusting foods they end up with and if they can actually eat them! Subscribe ...

The parents decide to take on the gummy vs real food challenge. See what totally disgusting foods they end up with and if they can actually eat them! Subscribe https://www.youtube.com/c/wearethedavises?sub_confirmation=1
Our mailing address:
We Are The Davises
28241 CrownValley Pkwy, Ste F #613
Laguna Niguel, CA 92677
“We Are The Davises” is an entertaining family vlog channel based in Florida. Our daily videos show our real life moments, challenges, funny skits, and traveling adventures. Shawn is an outstanding father and husband that enjoys coaching children in team sports like football and wrestling. Connie is very creative with our channel as she makes everything in our lives as fun and entertaining as possible while still molding our kids into the amazing people they are today. Kayla is currently 12 years old. Her passion is competitive cheer leading and loves all animals from fluffy puppies to the little frogs. Tyler is 11 years old and is obsessed with playing video games and team sports such as football. We are excited to share our fun filled journey!
Please be sure to check out all of our social media platforms that we have listed below for you.
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wearethedavises
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wearethedavises/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wearethedavises/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+WeAreTheDavises2016/posts
Snapchat: https://www.snapchat.com/add/wearethedavises
Musical.ly: wearethedavises
Do you like certain types of videos? Come and check out the playlists that we have setup to make it easier for you to watch what you like.
Here is a playlist of all our daily videos. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIqtjNq-QnGHSHxv410nkJfy
This playlist was put together specifically for all you Kayla fans.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIq9mItnfiQyqIO7g1-v28PM
This is a fun playlist full of DIY and Q&A videos. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIpp2LdRIubfaj9zLqu8lyjG
Sometimes we make up our own skits or fun activities and then we put them into this playlist for you all to enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIqqvh-bEo2pNKy2gEFfFt_v
This playlist is full of YouTube's most popular challenges, as well as a few that we made up ourselves. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIpUJDyGA6S60UumBPpMeM6p
Edited by RachelLeighShirley www.rachelleighshirley.com
MusicCredit:
https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music
EpidemicSoundhttp://www.epidemicsound.com

The parents decide to take on the gummy vs real food challenge. See what totally disgusting foods they end up with and if they can actually eat them! Subscribe https://www.youtube.com/c/wearethedavises?sub_confirmation=1
Our mailing address:
We Are The Davises
28241 CrownValley Pkwy, Ste F #613
Laguna Niguel, CA 92677
“We Are The Davises” is an entertaining family vlog channel based in Florida. Our daily videos show our real life moments, challenges, funny skits, and traveling adventures. Shawn is an outstanding father and husband that enjoys coaching children in team sports like football and wrestling. Connie is very creative with our channel as she makes everything in our lives as fun and entertaining as possible while still molding our kids into the amazing people they are today. Kayla is currently 12 years old. Her passion is competitive cheer leading and loves all animals from fluffy puppies to the little frogs. Tyler is 11 years old and is obsessed with playing video games and team sports such as football. We are excited to share our fun filled journey!
Please be sure to check out all of our social media platforms that we have listed below for you.
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wearethedavises
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wearethedavises/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wearethedavises/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+WeAreTheDavises2016/posts
Snapchat: https://www.snapchat.com/add/wearethedavises
Musical.ly: wearethedavises
Do you like certain types of videos? Come and check out the playlists that we have setup to make it easier for you to watch what you like.
Here is a playlist of all our daily videos. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIqtjNq-QnGHSHxv410nkJfy
This playlist was put together specifically for all you Kayla fans.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIq9mItnfiQyqIO7g1-v28PM
This is a fun playlist full of DIY and Q&A videos. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIpp2LdRIubfaj9zLqu8lyjG
Sometimes we make up our own skits or fun activities and then we put them into this playlist for you all to enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIqqvh-bEo2pNKy2gEFfFt_v
This playlist is full of YouTube's most popular challenges, as well as a few that we made up ourselves. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1SgveIsSpIpUJDyGA6S60UumBPpMeM6p
Edited by RachelLeighShirley www.rachelleighshirley.com
MusicCredit:
https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music
EpidemicSoundhttp://www.epidemicsound.com

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

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Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

3:33

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (Official Music Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://s...

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
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Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

2:32

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for mo...

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

10:24

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

In honor of Earth Day, we decided to finally put an end to the ridiculous argument of whet...

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
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---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

Ghost Keyboard Typing - Make your Notepad Type Automatically

This is a Technique by Which you can make Notepad type Automatically whatever you want.
This Process is known as ”GhostKeyboard Typing” Because you don't even touch your keyboard and words starts displaying in your notepad.

9 Ft Shark Eaten by Unknown Sea Creature

Shark eaten by Megalodon? A giant unknown sea creature ate a 9 foot shark. The 3 meter shark alpha was suddenly taken under by some sea animal.
At 4am on Christmas Eve a tagged shark was eaten by a massive unknown sea creature
-What Happened?
-Why it's Mysterious?
-And what are the Plausible Explainations?
-What Happened?
DocumentaryFilmmakerDaveRiggs and his crew, who tagged a large number of great white sharks off the coasts of Bremer Bay in Australia, encountered something very unusual.
One of the tags of a large shark was discovered washed up on shore.
The tag had no signs of algae, but instead appeared to have been heavily bleach by stomach acid.
Using satellite tracking, they were able to pin point the exact time the shark was mysterious attacked and eaten.
-Why this is mysterious
This is mysterious for 2 reasons
1.) The data showed the tag taking a sudden 1902 foot drop down the continental shelf which indicated that the shark had just become prey to something big and very fast.
2.) After further examination, it was revealed that the tag had been ingested by an animal with an internal temperate of around 78 degrees Fahrenheit, 32 degrees higher than
than the great white's normal temperature.
-Plausible Explainations?
Some people suggested that it could have been an orca, they are certainly large enough, with the biggest on record being 32 feet long and they have been known to hunt
great white sharks, however, the problem with this theory is that killer whales generally stay near the surface and the deepest an orca has ever been recorded was 850 feet
while this unknown creature was nearly 2,000 feet deep.
Another theory was that the tag may have somehow been removed from the shark. However, the trouble with this explanation is that
great white sharks body temperature is significantly warmer than the surrounding water, so if the tag had been removed the tracker would have to have picked up a sudden drop in temperature, which
which, it did not.
So could another larger great white shark have been the culprit? Not likely because of the temperate shift.
The temperate of the tag while in the muscle tissue is about 8 degrees warmer than the cold ocean water.
-Recorded Tag Temperature 46F
-Water Temperature 38F
The temperature of a great white shark's belly will range between 13-25 degrees warmer than the surrounding waters.
So this would indicate a temperature between 52 degrees with a maximum of 64 degrees.
The temperature of whatever unknown sea animal that ate the tagged shark was at 78 degrees.
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6:31

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types...

C Programming Tutorial 37 - Strongly Typed vs Loosely Typed Languages

This video is going to be an introduction to how programming languages consider data types. As we know, there are many data types in C programming. C is an example of a strongly typed programming language. Strongly typed means that every piece of data has a specific type.
Imagine if we stored everything in strings. This would become a problem because the computer would never know how to work with certain data. For example, let's say we have "5" and "6" and we try to add them. Should the computer add the numbers to be "11", or should it combine the strings to be "56" (The process of combining two strings like this is known as concatenation). Concatenation doesn't work quite this way in C, but in general, these are the kinds of problems that come up when we do not have things strongly typed. The opposite of a strongly typed language is called a loosely typed language. Now, a loosely typed language is not quite this loose.
A loosely typed language will usually have a few general types such as numbers, characters, or strings, but they are not nearly as strict with the typing.
What is a good example of this?
In C, if we do something like this: 1/3, the result is going to be zero. That's because the type of data being used are all integers. A loosely typed language is probably not going to be that obnoxious about types.
The benefit of using a strongly typed language is that it teaches you to be very discrete about what you want the computer to do. I think of a loosely typed language like water: it’s flowy and forgiving. I imagine a strongly typed language as very strict. Using a loosely typed language can be more simple starting out because you don't have to worry about all of the different data types, but there is less protection as we will see soon.
For example, in a popular programming language known as JavaScript the type system is loosely typed. This means instead of having data types like integer, double, float, signed and unsigned, we just have numbers. Some people call the way JavaScript works with data types as duck typing…. Which is weird, but basically it says something like "if it looks like a duck, if it talks like a duck, it is a duck."
Let's say you write a function (which is just a section of code you can call multiple times) which expects a number. Whoever uses that function can pass in whatever they want, or pass in nothing at all.
Because JavaScript is not strongly typed, you have to do extra work inside of the function to make sure the function responds appropriately. What happens if somebody throws in an array? What happens if somebody throws in a string? What happens if somebody throws in a potato?
With a strongly typed language, you often have to pay extra attention to data types, but you have an extra layer of protection, too. Different people like different things.
In C, it is not easy to flow between data types. Because of this, we need something called type casting. That is what we will be discussing in the next video.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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7:28

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/wXYv9V
...

Top 10 Most Dangerous Hackers Of All Time

Top 10 Most DangerousHackers Of All Time
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/wXYv9V
Jonathan James
A lot of hackers start young and they will only get younger as this generation grows up surrounded by technology. Jonathan James was the poster boy for teenage hackers, gaining his first conviction at the age of 16 for stealing $170m worth of code from NASA. He did this by hacking into the computers of the DefenceThreatReductionAgency and installing a “backdoor” which gave him access to both messages and source code. He was 15 at the time of the offence and 16 when tried, so received only a juvenile sentence. He resolved to put this past behind him but in 2007 his name was mentioned in conjunction with a hack on the TJX department store. Maintaining his innocence but convinced he would go to prison, he committed suicide on May 18th 2008.
Kevin PoulsenSometimes hackers can appear perfectly innocent in their day-to-day lives. Take Kevin Poulsen, who is now News Editor for wired.com – a popular and legitimate site favored by geeks. But he was once a black-hat hacker, pulling off such stunts as winning a Porsche 9-44 S2 from KIIS-FM by hacking their phone lines and guaranteeing he was the 102nd caller. Like other hackers, he has used his powers for the greater good by identifying MySpace users who were looking for child porn and convicting over 100 individuals. But he also hacked into the FBI computers and ending up serving a 5-year sentence for his crimes. Since his release, he’s concentrated on his writing career not just at wired but also with his book “Kingpin”.
Gary McKinnon
Gary McKinnon has been labeled by the media for carrying out the biggest computer hack of all time and being one of the most dangerous computer hackers in the world. He has been credited with carrying out the biggest and most dangerous attack on the U.S. military computer servers and deleting vital information, softwares, data and files over a period of 1 year whilst sitting in London. His actions have costed the U.S. government more than $70,000 for undoing whatever McKinnon had done. His act had left thousands of computers inoperable for a period of 24 hours. McKinnon argues that he carried out this activity to uncover information that the U.S. government may be hiding from the general public like technology and the likelihood of extra-terrestrial life.
Investigation against McKinnon started in the year of 2002 with the U.S. government demanding an extradition. McKinnon and his lawyers have long countered the extradition to the U.S citing the possibility of inhumane conditions in America, health grounds and stating the lack of necessity to face trial in the U.S.Albert Gonzales
The only motive for Albert Gonzales was to make money, a lot of it and really fast. Gonzales started a group of hackers called the Shadowcrew group. There were more than 4,000 members on the website who aided in trafficking 1.5 million credit, debit and ATM card numbers. The website taught it’s users on how to sell these cards, create fake documents and a host of other things they needed to know. Gonzales avoided a jail term by spilling the beans on the Shadowcrew group and providing information of all his associates.
From mid-2005 to the ending of 2007 Gonzales managed to hack into the computer systems of the TJX group of retailers servers and steal over 45 million card details. He and his crew were able to pull it off by using unsecured wi-fi connections along U.S. Route 1. Gonzales was finally arrested in 2008 and is currently serving a prison term, which is due to end in 2025.
Anonymous
Anonymous is the name of the decentralized "hacktivist" group known for launching online hacking campaigns in support of current political and social events. The group began in 2003 in the online forum 4chan with their mascot being the Guy Fawkes mask. At first it was a way for online members to collectively pull pranks, but it morphed into an online "vigilante" service looking for justice. The group has targeted the Church of Scientology, the KKK, PayPal, and many other high-profile institutions. It is known for its tagline, "We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us."
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8:31

8 Lesser-Known, Useful Elements

There are 118 elements on the periodic table, but it seems like only a handful of them get...

MySQL 24 - Important Data Types

I decided that instead of going through all of the categories of data types real slow, I'm going to give you a video that gives you the most important data types. That way, you can have a pretty good idea of what data types you need to use and when. Also, if any of the info in this video is too fast, you can watch the next videos to get a more in depth understanding.
The first data type is CHAR. This data type stores a string that is of a fixed length. You will only want to use this when you know the length of the data for the column. For example, you might have a column for phone numbers. As long as you know that every phone number is going to be the same format, you could use a column with the CHAR data type. You would just specify it as CHAR(length).
VARCHAR works in a similar fashion to CHAR, but it works best for variable length data. That means that if you have a column where each row is going to have a different length, you would want to use VARCHAR. For example, if you had a column for an email address, each email is going to be any number of characters.
Now, we are going to be going into numeric data types. For each of the numeric data types there are two variations. Signed and unsigned. Signed data types allow for negative values, but the highest value will be lower. Unsigned do not allow negatives but can store higher positive numbers.
INT is the data type you use when you need whole numbers. This is likely going to be the data type used for ID columns.
DOUBLE is the data type that can be used when you need to store a real number. This means that there can be numbers after a decimal point. There is also a data type called FLOAT. This works similarly but cannot handle as many numbers after the decimal. These data types have the downside in that they often cannot be trusted when doing math. Only use DOUBLES for data where it is acceptable to be pretty close to correct.
DECIMAL is a datatype that can be used for numbers where precision is extremely important. For example, Decimal can be used for columns dealing with money, important measurements, or anything where we need the data to work 100% as expected in arithmetic.
TIMESTAMP is a column that is used to easily record an instance in time. This is often used to record when row is created or updated. That's because it will automatically generate a value when an INSERT or UPDATE is issued against the database.
DATE, DATETIME, and TIME are all used to store dates and times. There are some differences between these and a TIMESTAMP, but I'll just give you one for now to tease you To understand the differences between these and the timestamp, you need to understand something known as UTC time. UTC time is a standard that you can compare against all time zones. It is known as coordinated universal time. So for example, PST is 8 hours behind UTC. The different between TIMESTAMP and these is that TIMESTAMP will convert whatever value to UTC when stored, and convert it back to whatever your time zone is when you retrieve it. This means that if you want to store a date that is going to change to the users time zone when retrieved, use TIMESTAMP. If it needs to stay the same no matter what, use DATETIME. If that's not super clear, we'll try to discuss it in more detail in an upcoming video.
The goal of this video was not to teach you the intimate details on defining data types. The goal was to give you a rough over view of the main data types you will find in MySQL.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Support me! http://www.patreon.com/calebcurry
Subscribe to my newsletter: http://eepurl.com/-8qtH
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Additional Links~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Larry Wall: 5 Programming Languages Everyone Should Know

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Java is "heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it," but Wall still thinks you should know it.
Question: What are the five programming languages everyone, even non-programmers, should know about and why?
Larry Wall: Oh, boy, that's a really tough question. It's kind of like asking what are the five countries you should know about if you're not interested in geology, or geography, or politics, and the answer varies depending on what your actual interests are, or what are the five companies you should know. And the answer changes over time, too. Back when I was getting started, lo these many decades ago, the answers would've been Fortran, Cobalt, Basic, Lisp, and maybe APL, and those were very formative languages back then and people learned a lot from those, but these days, it might be more important for you to know JavaScript, even if the only reason you know that is that you know whether or not to click the "enable JavaScript" button in your browser. But JavaScript is a nice, lightweight, object-oriented language and that's why it can fit in a browser and do these things such as run little programs that help you input your data and then send it off to a web server somewhere.
There are heavier-weight object-oriented languages and the elephant in the room is sort of Java, you can't really make a list of modern languages without talking about it. Java is sort of the Cobalt of the 21st century, I think. It's kind of heavyweight, verbose, and everyone loves to hate it, though not everyone will admit that. But managers kind of like it because it looks like you're getting a lot done, you know, if 100 lines of Java code accomplish a task, then it looks like you've written 100 lines, even though in a different language, it might only take 5 lines. You know, it's like, you know, you can eat a 1-pound steak or you can eat, you know, 100 pounds of shoe leather and you feel a greater sense of accomplishment after the shoe leather, but, you know, maybe they're some downsides.
But it also, because it is sort of considered an industrial language and programmers are sort of interchangeable parts, managers like it for that reason, and for that reason, a lot of Java jobs have been outsourced from the United States.
Oh, what other languages? I think going in a different direction, coming more from academia, we have a language like Haskell, which we call a functional programming language. That means function in a mathematical sense, not in the sense the other languages are dysfunctional. But a function mathematically has an input and an output and it maps to, you know, with a great deal of mathematical certainty what those are. Haskell is one of those languages that mathematician-type-minded people love; it's sort of a language for geniuses, by geniuses. So you should probably know about it, if only to be able to say, "Well, is this kind of like Haskell?" And if so, then you know you have to hire some really smart people to program in it. Haskell is sort of a modern kind of Lisp in that sense.
What else? Well, we can't leave off modern languages without talking about C. The C language, that's just spelled with the letter C, is actually about 40 years old, but people have tried to replace C with other languages that are like it and have by and large not succeeded because C is a very minimalistic language and very close to the metal, as we say, on a machine, and lets you get down and do very fine grain stuff, very efficiently, but it's a lot of hard work. But once you've done that work, you can run it pretty much everywhere. So almost all the other languages that you see, Java, Perl, whatever, actually if you look down underneath, they're actually implemented in C, or in a closely related language. So that continues to be a very fundamental language, if only because everyone is trying to reinvent it and not succeeding in doing so.
And finally, for a fifth language, well, you'd probably want to pick one of the scripting languages. There's several to choose from, there's Python, there's Ruby, but of course, I am prejudiced in favor of Perl, because I think it has the liveliest community and because we have intentionally been redesigning it lately to leapfrog all the other languages. For the last number of years, we've been redesigning it to out all the warts that we've noticed over time. And we figured it was just our one chance to break backward compatibility, break the things that need breaking, keep all the things that make Perl, Perl, keep it a joy to use, and with this redesign, make it a language that will be able to be useful and enjoyable for decades. And so I'd recommend Perl, but I'm known to be prejudiced in the matter.

3:33

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (Official Music Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://s...

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up

Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up (OfficialMusic Video) - Listen On Spotify: http://smarturl.it/AstleySpotify
DownloadRick's Number 1album "50" - https://BMG.lnk.to/RickAstley50NG/itunes
Buy On iTunes: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHiTunes
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/AstleyGHAmazon
Follow Rick Astley
Website: http://www.rickastley.co.uk/
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Lyrics
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
(Ooh, give you up)
(Ooh, give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
Never gonna give, never gonna give
(Give you up)
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching, but
You're too shy to say it
Inside, we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

2:32

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for mo...

Whatever. Not like any of you guys care anymore.

Never cleaned.
Never quit.
Never stop making vids.
Since I can't keep my word for more than a month I've decided to just say fuck it and go with whatever happens. MaybeI'll come back? Who really cares, because I've lost half my fan base anyways. I think I was sick of the fame and wanted to be a regular player, but shit just isn't the same. So I guess this is me apologizing for being an asshole. Go ahead, dislike the video, call me a fuckhead in the comments it's coool. But I'm not going to stop doing what I do, and I can promise that shit.

10:24

Proving The Earth Is Flat!

In honor of Earth Day, we decided to finally put an end to the ridiculous argument of whet...

Adele Carpool Karaoke

While home in London for the holidays, James Corden picks up his friend Adele for a drive around the city singing some of her classic songs before Adele raps Nicki Minaj's "Monster."
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---
Each week night, THE LATE LATE SHOW with JAMES CORDEN throws the ultimate late night after party with a mix of celebrity guests, edgy musical acts, games and sketches. Corden differentiates his show by offering viewers a peek behind-the-scenes into the green room, bringing all of his guests out at once and lending his musical and acting talents to various sketches. Additionally, bandleader Reggie Watts and the house band provide original, improvised music throughout the show. Since Corden took the reigns as host in March 2015, he has quickly become known for generating buzzworthy viral videos, such as CarpoolKaraoke."

Isolation - Mind Field (Ep 1)

MINDFIELD: ISOLATION
What happens when your brain is deprived of stimulation? What effect does being cut off from interaction with the outside world have on a person? What effect does it have on me, when I am locked in a windowless, soundproof isolation chamber for three days? In this episode of Mind Field, I take both an objective and a very intimate look at Isolation.
Special thanks to our guests:
Dominic Monaghan @DomsWildThings
Dr. Keller Wortham @DrKellerW
Dr. Ron Mossler, Chair and Professor of Psychology, La Valley CollegeWilliam Brown, and of course, Marnie and Mom.
Music by Russell Spurlock and HMX Music
http://www.russellspurlock.com
http://www.hmxmusic.com
Mind Field theme song by Jake Chudnow
https://www.youtube.com/user/jakechudnow
Reaction TimeTest - HumanBenchmark
http://www.humanbenchmark.com/tests/reactiontime
If you like this show and want to support creators and other shows like this, tell your friends about YouTubeRED! I appreciate YouTube’s dedication to scientific content. Mind Field wouldn’t have been possible without their support and belief in educational videos. It’s wonderful to know that a show like this can be made. To those of you watching: thank you. ALL OF YOU! Your passion for learning makes me feel great about the world.
Follow me at
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tweetsauce
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/electricpants
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If you’re in the U.S., Australia, Mexico or New Zealand, sign up for YouTube Red at youtube.com/red. If you’re not based in these countries, click here (https://goo.gl/UEojxv) for more details on how to watch.

What are the implications of digital transformation, technology, machine learning, and new business models on the future of work? The impact of big data and business analytics with technologies such as artificial intelligence have profound implications for companies, individuals, and society. At the same time, government policy on these issue lags technology and the impact on people. On this episode, a respected futurist and well-known data scientist explore these complicated and important issues.
FrankDiana leads the business solutions organization for TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) Global Consulting. and is a top futurist. Anthony Scriffignano is ChiefDataScientist at Dun and Bradstreet. MichaelKrigsman is an industry analyst and host of CXOTALK.
For more information, https://www.cxotalk.com/episode/future-tech-disruption-future-work
------------------
Check out more CXOTALK episodes: https://cxotalk.com/episodes
------------------
From the transcript:
(05:35) What are the forces shaping the future of work?
Frank Diana:
(05:42) So, let me kick that off and I’d love to get Anthony’s perspective on it as well. Things like the driverless car is an easy one. That one, in the last six months to a year, has really taken off, and now people don't see it as science fiction anymore, but that driverless car, as just one scenario, has brought in deep implications across every sector. And when you actually start to look at that, you appreciate just how disruptive and impactful that one scenario is. But how about things like healthy life extension? That's one of the scenarios that I'm tracking as well, as we've looked to extend our lives, and that's not just in terms of years lived, but healthy years lived. And, what does that mean to retirement? And what does that mean to insurance, and all of the things that, really, we think about? And on, and on, and on; the maker economy. The sharing access economy. These are all scenarios that I call … And again, they do intersect and intertwine. Very impactful!
Anthony Scriffignano:
(06:30) So, maybe I can just add a little bit to that. On the driverless car, I would expand that to this concept of autonomy. So, we have things. We have cars. We have drones. We have fill-in-the-blank. And these things have agents in them that are describing their behavior, so we give them goals. In the case of a car, it might be “drive safely and get where you’re going.” And then all of a sudden, these autonomous agents need the ability to modify their goals. Something changes in the environment, somebody runs out in front of the car, etc. And now, we are … Autonomous agents are given the power to change their behavior at our request. That’s going to change everything for us. That’s going to change the way we interact with our agents because they may not be doing what we ask them to do anymore. Kind of like children, right? And also, because those agents might be able to think faster than we can, doesn’t necessarily mean that they have the experience and the context that we do, with the emotion that we do.
(07:23) So, if I could tie that to the healthy living comment, think about things like senior care. Think about things like understanding how to deal with people in the end-stages of life. Do we want autonomous agents doing that? I don't think so. So, I think at some level, this disruptive change gives us the opportunity to focus on things that human beings uniquely do better than machines, at least in the thirty-year horizon that we can see. And also, we have to pay attention to what we're giving up to those machines and make sure that that's not happening by accident. And, I would add one last thing, which is that not all of this innovation is for good. So, think about the ways that the band guys can use this disruptive innovation that's happening all around us to disrupt in ways that we don't even have words for, yet. So, there's a very high cost to doing nothing. And that high cost is that some of that innovation happens without us paying attention, and then we get disrupted in ways that are really terrifying and surprising at the same time.
(23:47) And so, the question comes up: Could I write a piece of software that could write an article about an event like that that passes the Turing Test – that lets people believe that it was written by a human? And the answer is “yes,” until a hot air balloon lands in the middle of the track that was unexpected or, all of a sudden a geyser opens up. See, these unexpected things start to happen and algorithms aren’t going to be so good at that because they haven’t been taught to write about it; whereas, a reporter would jump in and say, “This is the coolest thing ever! A hot air balloon just landed in the middle of the track and I’m going to write about it first, and I’m going to get the greatest article and I’m going to get the Pulitzer Prize.”

The best stats you've ever seen | Hans Rosling

http://www.ted.com With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling uses an amazing new presentation tool, Gapminder, to present data that debunks several myths about world development. Rosling is professor of international health at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, and founder of Gapminder, a nonprofit that brings vital global data to life. (Recorded February 2006 in Monterey, CA.)
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at http://www.ted.com/translate.
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http://www.twitter.com/tednews
Checkout our Facebook page for TED exclusives
https://www.facebook.com/TED

55:41

David Leonhardt: "How to Tell Stories with Data" | Google News Lab

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and editor of the New York Times’ data journalism websit...

David Leonhardt: "How to Tell Stories with Data" | Google News Lab

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and editor of the New York Times’ data journalism website The Upshot, David Leonhardt, shares the tricks of the master storyteller’s trade. In conversation with Google News Lab data editor Simon Rogers, he shows how data is changing the world; and your part in the revolution.

The parents decide to take on the gummy vs real food challenge. See what totally disgusting foods they end up with and if they can actually eat them! Subscribe https://www.youtube.com/c/wearethedavises?sub_confirmation=1
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EpidemicSoundhttp://www.epidemicsound.com

TOP 10 The Best Talent In The World !!! (Look and ...

When the sun dims dramatically Monday morning, that would be like an entire power plant unit shutting down for the Lone Star State's electricity grid. The much-anticipated solar eclipse will wipe out about 600 megawatts worth of electricity generation from Texas' growing solar power industry, according to officials with ERCOT, which manages the Texas grid.&nbsp; ... "That is not very much," she said about eclipse's influence ... ....

Multiple media reports Thursday reported a van crashed into dozens of people in the center of Barcelona Thursday killing two and injuring several people. Local Spanish media say two armed men have entered a restaurant after a van crashed into a crowd of people, according to Reuters, and police consider the incident to be terror related. Local media reports say two people were killed instantly when struck by the van....

The number of asylum seekers who are illegally crossing into Canada from the United States more than tripled last month, according to new data released on Thursday by the Canadian government which hints at the deep fears that migrants have about the recent U.S. administration immigration crackdown ...The RoyalCanadian Mounted Police said that an additional 3,800 asylum seekers were arrested crossing the U.S ... "It's not a crisis ... ....

The Guardian reported that police announced one person was arrested in relation to the attack on Thursday where someone drove a white van through the busy, pedestrian area of Las Ramblas in Barcelona, Spain which has left at least 13 dead, and more than 50 injured ... ... U.S ... "The United States condemns the terror attack in Barcelona, Spain, and will do whatever is necessary to help. Be tough & strong, we love you!" . U.S ... ....

The top two officers and the top enlisted sailors who were in charge when the USS Fitzgerald had a collision on June 17 that killed seven crew members will face disciplinary measures after seven crew members died from the incident, a senior Navy official said on Thursday. The Washington Post reported that Adm. William F ... The discipline varies but will include likely career-ending actions against the ship's captain at the time, Cmdr....